Endless Horizons
1953 film
- 3 July 1953 (1953-07-03)
Running time
Endless Horizons (French: Horizons sans fin) is a 1953 French drama film directed by Jean Dréville and starring Giselle Pascal, Jean Chevrier and René Blancard. It was entered into the 1953 Cannes Film Festival.[1] [2] Location shooting took place at the Enghien Moisselles Airfield. The film's sets were designed by the art director Raymond Gabutti.
Synopsis
The film is a biopic of the pioneering French aviatrix Hélène Boucher who broke a number of woman's flying records before her death in a crash in 1934.
Cast
- Giselle Pascal as Hélène Boucher
- Jean Chevrier as André Danet
- René Blancard as René Gaudin
- Paul Frankeur as Soupape
- Maurice Ronet as Marc Caussade
- Marie-France Planeze as Geneviève Gaudin
- Hubert de Malet as Brunel
- Christiane Barry as Jacqueline
- Jacques Bernard as Pigeon
- Lisette Lebon as Jacquotte
- Pierre Trabaud as Pierre Castel
- Marcel André as Dusmesnil
- Micheline Gary
- Guy Derlan as Fougères
- François Joux as 1er actionnaire
- Marcel Josz as 2ème actionnaire
References
Bibliography
- Bessy, Maurice & Chirat, Raymond. Histoire du cinéma français: 1951-1955. Pygmalion, 1989.
External links
- Endless Horizons at IMDb
- Endless Horizons at AllMovie
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Films directed by Jean Dréville
- Autour de L'Argent (1928)
- A Man of Gold (1934)
- The Chess Player (1938)
- White Nights in Saint Petersburg (1938)
- His Uncle from Normandy (1939)
- President Haudecoeur (1940)
- Annette and the Blonde Woman (1942)
- Business Is Business (1942)
- A Cage of Nightingales (1945)
- Hanged Man's Farm (1945)
- The Visitor (1946)
- Carbon Copy (1947)
- The Spice of Life (1948)
- Operation Swallow (1948)
- Return to Life (1949)
- The Girl with the Whip (1952)
- The Secret of the Mountain Lake (1952)
- The Seven Deadly Sins (1952)
- Endless Horizons (1953)
- La Reine Margot (1954)
- Stopover in Orly (1955)
- The Suspects (1957)
- A Dog, a Mouse, and a Sputnik (1958)
- La Fayette (1961)
- The Last of the Mohicans (1968)
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